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Making maple syrup

There aren't many places in the world where the weather conditions are perfect for collecting tree sap and making maple syrup. You need warm sun on the trees during the days and below freezing temperatures at night. Luckily for me I live in the Canadian province which produces three quarters of the world's maple syrup: Quebec. Even better my Canadian family have been making their own for almost 30 years. Below is the proof - a piece of paper belonging to my uncle which gives statistics for every year they have produced it since 1987.

Making syrup since the 1980s

Perusing this precious document reveals how many gallons of the delicious stuff they have made each year, when in the Spring the sap was flowing well and how long the season lasted. You can see the third week in March is usually the time when the conditions become right. It's a short season - usually just spanning three weeks, during which my cousin and several volunteers help my uncle to collect and boil the sap.

Frozen maple sap

At first the sap may be frozen like these giant ice cubes above, looking like an enormous gin and tonic. Each cube is actually the shape of the pail which hangs on the tree that has been tapped. My cousin can be seen in my video below drilling a hole in a tree where the sap immediately starts to flow. You can also see this second weekend of the season yielded sap which had not frozen and was easier to collect (apart that is from the deep melting snow which meant we sank to our thighs unexpectedly.)

The tell-tale signs that the season is ending can be the appearance of moths in the buckets or the sap starts to look yellow. For me collecting the sap from the trees seems like a little miracle with every lid you lift but by far the most frustrating job, which you will also see in the video, is the waiting around for 40 gallons of sap to make just one gallon of syrup. The fire under the syrup evaporator must be kept raging at all times and there are stories that some producers used to burn tyres in there to give the fire an extra boost just before the syrup looked ready. It is a slow start but once a lot of sap has evaporated then the syrup starts to flow and those little bottles get filled for the year ahead - for oatmeal, for pancakes and bacon and for ice cream.
Here is my video which you can compare to the second film from the Canadian Film Archive from the 40s. It is amazing how much has stayed the same.

For many Quebeckers Spring is the time to go to the sugar shack - a commerical venture where farmers pour extra-boiled syrup onto the snow to make toffee, and you can eat a syrup-infused Sugaring Off meal. It is a celebration of Spring and that winter is behind us.

"There are two things I love in life - travel and opera. Which is probably why I write a blog on each of those subjects. I'm a filmmaker, former BBC journalist, cottage dweller, gardener and cat lover. I make documentaries, profile videos of individuals and companies as well as trailers for productions and festivals. Check out my other blog Diva Films: My life as an operatic filmmaker and my website annekostalas.com. Follow @viewfromalake on instagram and twitter."

Comments

A very enjoyable post, Anne, and here's a link to a similar one that you might enjoy: https://atthemanse.wordpress.com/2013/04/13/maple-syrup-time-at-the-manse/Well done on your own video, and thanks for the 1941 video as well. I loved that valiant little dog struggling to pull the sleigh through the deep snow! And the production methods that didn't quite measure up to our current standards of food safety!

"There are two things I love in life - travel and opera. Which is probably why I write a blog on each of those subjects. I'm a filmmaker, former BBC journalist, cottage dweller, gardener and cat lover. I make documentaries, profile videos of individuals and companies as well as trailers for productions and festivals. Check out my other blog Diva Films: My life as an operatic filmmaker and my website annekostalas.com. Follow @viewfromalake on instagram and twitter."